The Entrepreneurship Myth
There's a popular narrative in tech that goes something like this: anyone can be a founder, AI lowers the barrier to building a company, therefore everyone should start one. It sounds empowering. In practice, it ignores a basic reality: most people don't want to run a company. They want to build things.
Running a company means fundraising, managing people, dealing with legal paperwork, handling accounting, optimizing for growth metrics, and a hundred other tasks that have nothing to do with the actual craft of building software. Telling every skilled developer they should become a CEO is like telling every great chef they should open a restaurant chain.
A Different Vision
Our vision is simpler and, we think, more realistic. What if you could just build things and get paid for them? Not as an employee constrained to someone else's roadmap. Not as a founder drowning in operational overhead. Just as a builder who ships useful software and earns proportionally to the value it creates.
This isn't a radical idea. Musicians earn royalties from their recordings. Authors earn from book sales. Photographers license their work. In creative industries, there's an established model for individual creators to earn from their work without having to build a media empire around it. Software development needs the same thing.
Building the Rails
That's what Kainotomic is: the infrastructure that makes this possible for AI developers. We handle the marketplace, the distribution, the payments, and the enterprise sales channel. You handle the building.
The future of work is about options. The option to stay independent. The option to earn from your creations. The option to focus entirely on your craft. We're not trying to turn everyone into entrepreneurs. We're trying to make sure everyone has the choice to build, ship, and earn on their own terms.